The 1984 Treble

The Liverpool squad that won the treble in 1984 is a team that many consider to be the greatest of all time.

The 1984 Liverpool squad featured some of the greatest players playing in England at the time, including Ronnie Whelan, Kenny Dalglish, Ian Rush, Alan Kennedy and Bruce Grobbelaar.

This team was simply unbeatable.

They had the right mix of defense and attack that allowed them to win their league, the League Cup and the European Cup in the same season.

This feat was only made more incredible by the fact that this was Joe Fagan's first season as manager.

This team that was defined by utter and complete dominance created a golden age for Liverpool soccer. The three trophies they won in 1984 are material proof of Liverpool's dominance during this time period.

Robbie Fowler’s Historic Hat Trick

In 1994, striker Robbie Fowler scored the fastest hat trick in league history. It took Fowler just over four minutes to score three goals against Arsenal.

Fowler’s first goal came off a rebound in the box. He quickly put the ball in the back of the net.

Just one minute later, Fowler ripped the ball to the back right post to score his second goal.

Finally, John Barnes lobbed the ball through the defense to Fowler. While his initial effort was saved, he quickly recovered, took a dribble and scored to complete his hat trick.

Fowler became one of Liverpool’s greatest players of all time, and this moment is arguably the greatest of his career. He would go on to score 128 goals in 266 career appearances and is currently ranked fourth all time in EPL scoring with 163 total goals.

2005 Champions League Final

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In 2005, a Liverpool team spearheaded by midfielder and captain Steven Gerrard met a loaded A.C. Milan squad in the Champions League final in Istanbul, Turkey.

Liverpool had fought through a tough group stage, and subsequently defeated Bayer Leverkusen and Juventus to reach the semi-final match against Chelsea. Liverpool defeated Chelsea in a 1-0 nail-biter of a match.

In the final, Milan jumped out ahead by three goals before half. Things looked grim for Liverpool, who were not favored to win the match anyway.

Liverpool, however, came out in the second half with a new resolve to win. A shift to a three man back line allowed them to push more men forward.

Steven Gerrard would open the scoring for Liverpool with a brilliant header. A goal from Vladimír Šmicer and a rebounded penalty shot by Xabi Alonso eventually forced the game into overtime and then penalties.

Liverpool goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek made three exquisite saves to award Liverpool with their fifth Champions League trophy in a fantastic come from behind fashion